Continuing the final arguments, senior advocate R S Cheema, who appeared for the CBI, told District Judge J R Aryan that the two Delhi Police officials who had deposed as defence witnesses in the case were not "reliable".
"Whatever action was taken by the Delhi Police was taken against the people who helped the Sikhs. Police did not take action against the main culprits. No policeman was recording complaint during the riots. They were not helping the victims. They were trying to shield the accused," he said.
The case relates to anti-Sikh riots that had broken out after the assassination of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi on October 31, 1984.
"Even the police officials, who were defence witnesses in the case, had said in their statements that they had not seen anything during the riots," Cheema argued.
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He said that this showed the police was only interested in "discrediting" the statement of eyewitness and complainant Jagdish Kaur and to give "clean chit" to Sajjan Kumar.
He referred to the statement of defence witness Chajju Ram, a police constable, in which he had deposed that he was on duty during those tumultuous days and did not come across any report of any killing or rioting in the Raj Nagar area.